| Literature DB >> 28212622 |
Marlene Sandlund1, Dawn A Skelton2, Petra Pohl3, Christina Ahlgren4, Anita Melander-Wikman5, Lillemor Lundin-Olsson4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: To offer fall prevention exercise programs that attract older people of both sexes there is a need to understand both women's and men's views and preferences regarding these programs. This paper aims to systematically review the literature to explore any underlying gender perspectives or gender interpretations on older people's views or preferences regarding uptake and adherence to exercise to prevent falls.Entities:
Keywords: Accidental falls; Adherence; Aged; Exercise; Gender identity
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28212622 PMCID: PMC5316178 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-017-0451-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fig. 1Details on the process of including papers for this mixed studies review
Summary of aim, methods, participants and reported results on gender analysis, if applicable, for the included quantitative studies and studies with a mixed design
| Article | Aim | Methods | Participants | Reported gender analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Whitehead et al. [ | Investigating the reason for not taking up fall or injury prevention strategy among older people who have sustained a fall and attended an emergency department. | Structural individual interviews | 60 (44 women and 16 men) community dwelling participants who attended the emergency department of a public hospital with a fall. Mean age 78 years. | Considerably more women than men mentioned already being active enough (women 27.3%, men 18.8%); can’t do exercises (women 22.7%, men 12.5%); and can’t leave house/spouse (women 13.3%, men 0%), as reason for reluctance to take part in exercise classes. |
| Yardley et al. [ | To determine whether threat or coping appraisal are most closely related to older people’s intention to undertake strength and balance training. | Postal survey (n. 451) and structural interviews (n.107) | 558 (397 women and 161 men) older people. Aged between 60 and 95 years, mean age 74. | Younger respondents and women were somewhat more positive in their coping appraisal than were older respondents and men. Female gender was positively related to threat appraisal ( |
| Yardley et al. [ | To determine the extent to which older people, in different sectors, are willing to engage in different falls prevention activities. | Postal survey | 5440 (2846 women and 2482 men) patients from 10 general practices. Aged > 54 years. | Substantially more women than men indicated that they were likely to attend group sessions ( |
| Lin et al. [ | To explore attitudes and beliefs of Taiwanese older women regarding SBT programs and their intentions to attend such programs. | Survey | 221 women recruited from college for people with a wish to learn in later life. Aged between 55 and 94 years, mean age 72. | Only women included. |
| Snodgrass and Rivett [ | To explore the views and perceptions of older people about falls and falls injury prevention services, to identify incentives and barriers to attending a falls injury prevention service. | Survey | 75 members of community groups. No experience of fall prevention exercises required. Aged between 61 and 93 years, mean age 74. Sex not reported. | Statistics not reported according to gender. |
| Hedley et al. [ | To explore the reasons why the participants either did or did not adhere to an RCT intervention with both group and home exercises. | Mixed design: | 5 community dwelling women. Participants in the Staying Steady program with 32 weeks of group and home based exercises. Aged between 60 and 88 years, mean age 77. | Only women included. |
| Robinson et al. [ | To explore the process of behavior change in a small sample of older people with the fall-associated chronic liver disease primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) receiving either a standard or an enhanced program of strength and balance training. | Mixed design: | 9 community dwelling women with PBC who participated in a 6-week or 6-month strength and balance training program. Aged between 63 and 80 year. mean age 70 year. | Only women included. |
Summary of aim, methods, participants and reported results on gender analysis, if applicable, for the included qualitative studies
| Article | Aim | Methods | Participants | Reported gender analysis |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clark et al. [ | To explore older, community-dwelling adults’ attitudes and values about proposed church-delivered balance classes for fall prevention to inform a social marketing campaign. | Focus groups ( | 60 church members and potential users of the fall prevention exercise classes. Aged ≥60 year. Sex not reported. | Women respond to a fall-prevention message more than men, and men rely on women for motivation. Women’s gendered identities positioned them to be the primary motivators who could soften their “stubborn” men to enroll in health programs. Men’s gendered identities positioned them to protectively identify women as high-priority recipients of balance and fall-prevention messages. |
| Jagnoor et al. [ | To investigate fall prevention as a health priority among older people; to understand people’s perception of risk and concepts of fall injury prevention; and to explore acceptability of yoga as an intervention for falls prevention in the community. | Focus groups ( | Gender divided focus groups in three sociodemographic clusters. 12–18 participants in each constellation. Aged >60 year. | The experience, knowledge, perceptions and health priorities were diverse and differed across the three sociodemographic groups, although these were similar among men and women within each sociodemographic group. Women considered themselves active enough with domestic work. No gender discussion. |
| Berlin Hallrup et al. [ | To explore the lived experience of fall risk from a life world perspective. | Individual interviews | 13 community dwelling older women with previous fragility fractures. Participants in a hip fracture prevention program comprising a bone mineral density scanning, and written fall preventive advice including advice on exercises. Aged between 76 and 86 years. | Only women included. |
| Hawley [ | To explore what might encourage older people to exercise at home after falls rehabilitation. | Individual interviews | 8 community dwelling, 1 nursing home resident. All had been through falls rehabilitation and offered home exercise programs Aged ≥60 year. Sex not reported. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Horne et al. [ | To explore the beliefs of both South Asian and White British community dwelling older adults in their 60s about falls and exercise for fall prevention. | Focus groups ( | 87 + 40 (81 women and 46 men) community dwelling participants. Aged between 60 and 70 year, Focus group mean age 65. Individual interviews mean age 64. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Horne et al. [ | To identify salient beliefs that influence uptake and adherence to exercise for fall prevention among community-dwelling Caucasian and South Asian in UK. | Ethnographic study participant observations, focus groups ( | 87 + 40 (81 women and 46 men) community dwelling participants. Aged between 60 and 70 year, Focus group mean age 65. Individual interviews mean age 64. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Hutton et al. [ | To develop an understanding of the perceptions that older adults at risk at of falls, and previously involved in organized group exercise, have of physical activity. | Focus groups ( | 20 community dwelling persons (90% females) recruited from a RCT investigating the effectiveness of Tai Chi in reducing falls. Aged between 68 and 81 year, mean age 73. | Gender not reported in quotes. |
| Lam et al. [ | To examine older people’s perceptions and experiences of falls, physiotherapy and exercise. | Individual interviews | 19 (10 women and 9 men) community dwelling | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Lindgren De Groot and Fagerström [ | To describe motivating factors and barriers for older adults to adhere to group exercise in the local community. | Individual interviews | 10 (5 women and 5 men) community dwelling persons and former participants in a fall preventive exercise program. Aged between 71 and 91 year, mean age 83. | Gender not reported in quotes. |
| Meyer et al. [ | To understand the perspectives of older people in adopting a home-based balance exercise program to address mild balance dysfunction, and to identify barriers and opportunities facing community health PTs in delivering this program. | Focus groups ( | 9 (6 women and 3 men) community dwelling participants who had completed a six-month program. Aged between 67 and 86 years. | Gender not reported in quotes |
| Moody et al. [ | To investigate participants’ perceptions of a twelve week aqua-aerobics program on falls risk and physical function in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis. | Focus groups ( | 17 (13 women and 4 men) community dwelling participants with lower extremity osteoarthritis who had completed a 12 week water-based exercise program. Aged between 68 and 89 years, mean age 78. | Gender not reported in quotes. |
| Robinson et al. [ | To involve older people and PTs in the development of acceptable strategies to promote uptake and adherence with an exercise-based fall prevention program | Focus groups ( | 12 (8 women and 4 men) older people attending a regional falls and syncope service including exercises. Aged between 72 and 88 years, mean age 79. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Simpson et al. [ | To examine the extent to which older people are willing to adopt any of the following strategies in order to avoid falling: balance and lower limb strengthening exercises. home safety advice, and ‘taking care’. | Individual interviews | 32 (26 women and 6 men) persons discharged from acute elderly care medical wards. No experience of fall prevention exercises required. Aged >65 years, mean age 83. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Stathi and Simey [ | To explore the exercise experiences of nursing home residents who participated in a 6-month falls prevention exercise intervention. | Individual interviews, | 14 (12 women and 2 men) nursing home residents who participated in a 6-month chair-based exercise program. Aged between 86 and 99 years. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
| Suttanon et al. [ | Identify factors that influence commencement and adherence to a home-based balance exercise program for older people with mild to moderate Alzheimer’s disease (AD). | Individual interviews | 10 (7 women and 3 men) participants with AD and 9 (6 women and 3 men) of their caregivers, who had completed a six-month home-based balance exercise program. | Mostly quotes from women, no comparison. |
| Vernon and Ross [ | To explore the reasons older people had for attending local postural stability exercise classes. | Individual interviews, 22 at baseline and 17 at follow up | 22 (20 women and 2 men) community dwelling participants who had fallen and attended balance exercise classes. Aged between 65 and 94 years. | Gender not reported in quotes. |
| Wong et al. [ | To estimate the uptake rate of a fall prevention program | Focus groups | Focus Groups: (9 women and 4 men) previous fallers among who attended exercise classes based on the FaME protocol. Aged between 65 and 91 year, mean age 76. | Gender not reported in quotes. |
| Yardley et al. [ | To identify factors common to a variety of populations and settings that may promote or inhibit uptake and adherence to falls related interventions | Individual interviews | 69 (50 women and 19 men) older people, two thirds (46) had been offered an intervention, and half (32) had taken part in an intervention. Aged between 68 and 97 years, mean age 79. | Quotes from both men and women but no comparison. |
Summary of the thematic analysis of facilitators and barriers reported in all studies. Views and preferences reported were coded and similar codes grouped into themes
| Examples of codes | Themes | Reported in quantitative or mixed studies (see Table | Reported in qualitative studies (see Table |
|---|---|---|---|
| Facilitators | |||
| “Recommendations from health professionals” | Support from professionals or family | Quantitative: Yardley et al. [ | Hawley [ |
| “Socialization” | Social interaction | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Clark et al. [ |
| “Staying independent” | Perceived benefits | Quantitative: Yardley et al. [ | Clark et al. [ |
| “Trust-based atmosphere” | A supportive exercise context | Quantitative: Lin et al. [ | Berlin Hallrup et al. [ |
| “Commitment to a structured program” | Feelings of commitment | Meyer et al. [ | |
| “Interest and enjoyment” | Having fun | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Berlin Hallrup et al.[ |
| Barriers | |||
| ”Transportation to exercise venue” | Practical issues | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Horne et al. [ |
| “Fear of adverse effects” | Concerns about exercise | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Horne et al. [ |
| “Misunderstandings of benefits” | Unawareness | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Horne et al. [ |
| “Deterioration in health” | Reduced health status | Quantitative: Whitehead et al. [ | Hutton et al. [ |
| “Unprofessional instructor” | Lack of support | Quantitative: Whitehead et al. [ | Hutton et al. [ |
| “Lack of motivation” | Lack of interest | Quantitative: Snodgrass and Rivett [ | Hutton et al. [ |